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FOREX: Dollar’s Plunge against the Yen Doesn’t Spread to EURUSD, GBPUSD or AUDUSD

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FOREX: Dollar’s Plunge against the Yen Doesn’t Spread to EURUSD, GBPUSD or AUDUSD

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Wall Street Likely Profited Off Federal Reserve

by Shahien Nasiripour on April 26, 2011

Huffington Post…

A newly-released study from the Congressional Research Service bolsters claims that the nation’s largest banks profited off the Federal Reserve’s financial crisis-era programs by borrowing cash for next to nothing, then lending it back to the federal government at substantially higher rates. The report reinforces long-held beliefs that the banking system in essence engaged in taxpayer-financed arbitrage: They got money for free, then lent it back to Uncle Sam while collecting juicy returns. Left out of the equation are the millions of everyday borrowers, like households and small businesses, who were unable to secure loans needed to tide them over until the crisis ended. The Fed released records under pressure in December and March that showed the extent of its largesse. The CRS study shows for the first time how some of the most sophisticated financial firms could have taken the Fed’s money and flipped easy profits simply by lending it back to another arm of the government. The report was requested by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), who likened the crisis-era emergency loans to “direct corporate welfare to big banks,” in a statement. The cash likely was lent back to Uncle Sam in the form of Treasuries and other debt “instead of using the Fed loans to reinvest in the economy,” Sanders added. In all, more than $3 trillion was lent to financial institutions from the Fed, and terms were generous. Junk-rated securities were pledged as collateral for taxpayer-backed loans. The Fed did not provide conditions for how the money was to be used. As part of one Fed program, on 33 separate occasions, nine firms were able to borrow between $5.2 billion and $6.2 billion in U.S. government securities for four-week intervals, paying one-time fees that amounted to the minuscule rate of 0.0078 percent. In another, financial firms pledged more than $1.3 trillion in junk-rated securities to the Fed for cheap overnight loans. The rates were as low as 0.5 percent. During one three-month period in 2009, Bank of America borrowed more than $48 billion at rates ranging from 0.25 to 0.5 percent. Meanwhile, the largest U.S. lender tripled its holdings of Treasuries and other taxpayer-backed debt to about $15 billion — securities that yielded 3.5 percent. During the third quarter of 2009, the bank borrowed $2.9 billion from the Fed through a program that charged 0.25 percent interest. In that same period, Bank of America increased its holdings of taxpayer-backed federal debt by $12 billion, according to the Congressional Research Service. Those securities yielded an average of 3.2 percent. “Bank of America provided vital support to the economy throughout the financial crisis and we continue to support businesses and individuals today through our lending and capital raising activities,” spokesman Jerry Dubrowski said in an email. In another period, JPMorgan Chase, the second-largest bank, swelled its holdings of taxpayer-backed federal debt by $20 billion, which yielded 2.1 percent, while at the same time borrowing $29 billion from the Fed at a rate of 0.3 percent. JPMorgan did not respond to a request for comment. In contrast, during the first year of the Obama administration, small businesses shuttered due to lackluster sales and a lack of credit, foreclosures surged, and credit contracted at one of the quickest rates on record. “Why wasn’t the Fed providing these same sweetheart deals to the American people?” asked Warren Gunnels, senior policy adviser to Sanders. “The Fed was practicing socialism for the rich, powerful and the connected, while the federal government was promoting rugged individualism to everyone else.” At the time, Fed officials said its bailout programs were necessary to restart the flow of credit. If money couldn’t flow to lenders, households and businesses would be next. Even more layoffs and foreclosures could have ensued, officials argued. Lending, however, decreased, according to Fed and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation data. Mortgage rates dropped, but mortgages were harder to come by. Credit card lines were slashed. Loans were called in. New financing plunged. In 2009, outstanding credit to U.S. households declined by $234.5 billion. For non-corporate businesses, credit plunged $296.1 billion, Fed data show. Sanders said the spread between firms’ borrowing rates and their lending rates to Uncle Sam amounted to “free money.” For Bank of America during the third quarter of 2009, the spread was nearly 3 percent. Dubrowski countered by pointing out that Bank of America “extended $184 billion in credit to individuals and businesses” during that time. The author of the CRS report, Marc Labonte, cautioned that “correlation does not prove causation.” “There is no information available on how banks used specific funds borrowed from the Federal Reserve,” he wrote. The Federal Reserve declined to comment. CRS on the Federal Reserve’s Bailout

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Wall Street Likely Profited Off Federal Reserve

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Roger Martin: Fixing the Game: What the NFL Can Teach Us About Executive Compensation

April 25, 2011

The last decade has seen unprecedented upheaval in our capital markets, marked by two massive crashes that destroyed billions of dollars in value: the dot-com crash of 2000-2 and the financial market crash of 2008. After 2002, a whole series of regulatory changes were adopted to prevent a future crash. Yet the next crash still came. And as it did, one might have expected that observers would ask: what did we do wrong the last time? Why didn’t our fixes do what they were intended to do? One might have expected that we would ask these hard questions. Yet we haven’t. And as long as we fail to understand the real, fundamental reasons behind these crashes, and the bubbles that preceded them, it is only a matter of time until the next crisis. The mayhem in our capital markets is ultimately the unfortunate effect of tightly tying together two different markets: the real market and the expectations market. The real market is the world in which factories are built, products are designed and produced, real products and services are bought and sold, revenues are earned, expenses are paid and real dollars of profit show up on the bottom line. That is the world that business executives control — at least to some extent. The real market has been utterly overtaken in emphasis by the expectations market. The expectations market is the world in which shares in companies are traded between investors — in other words, the stock market. In this market, investors assess the real market activities of a company today and, on the basis of that assessment, form expectations as to how the company is likely to perform in the future. The consensus view of all investors and potential investors as to expectations of future performance shapes the stock price of the company. Modern capitalism dictates that the job of executive leadership is to maximize shareholder value, as measured by the market value of the company’s stock. To that end, the CEO should always be working to increase the stock price, to raise expectations about the company’s prospects ad infinitum. And just how does that play out? To see, let’s look at how expectations play out in professional football. In 2007, the New England Patriots had a remarkable year; the team went unbeaten in the regular season, racking up a stellar 16-0 record. Eight of its starters went to the Pro Bowl. Quarterback Tom Brady was named the league’s most valuable player, and head coach Bill Belichick earned coach of the year honors. The team scored more points that season than any team in history. It was, in short, a superlative performance. In terms of the real market, the Patriots were perfect. But the Patriots’ performance in the expectations game was mediocre in comparison. In betting vernacular, a favored team covers the spread when it wins the game by more than the point spread. In this case, the point spread is the moral equivalent of the stock price, in that it captures the consensus expectations of all bettors. In their sixteen-win regular season, the Patriots covered the point spread only ten times. Why? Because expectations grew to unattainable levels. The Patriots had started the season with sensible expectations and played, admittedly, exceptionally well. The average point spread for the first eight weeks was 10.5, and the Patriots were able to cover the spread in every game, winning by an average of 20.5 points. But as they continued to perform very well, expectations rose; bettors expected the Patriots to continue to be more and more exceptional each week. Soon, the Patriots were facing the largest spreads in the history of the NFL. They played very well in the second half of the season too. They still won each game, but in the final eight weeks, the Patriots beat opponents by just 12.5 points on average. Yet point spreads had risen to an average of 16.5. Against these heightened expectations, the Patriots covered the point spread in only two of their games in the second half of the season. Brady’s Patriots thrashed the Dolphins 28-7 in the second-to-last game of the season, but still couldn’t meet bettors’ expectations for a win by 22 points or more. The lesson is that no matter how good you are, you cannot beat expectations forever. Expectations will get ahead of you. Patriots quarterback Tom Brady had perhaps the finest season of any quarterback in NFL history, but he couldn’t beat expectations more than ten of sixteen times. And that is why quarterbacks aren’t compensated on the basis of how they perform against the point spread. While Tom Brady was leading his team to a perfect record but only beating expectations ten times out of sixteen, his young counterpart on the Cleveland Browns, Derek Anderson, was leading his team to a decent but unspectacular 10-6 record on the field, but a strong 12-4 record against the spread. If the point spread mattered more than the real game, Anderson, whose team missed the playoffs, would have out-earned Brady, who took his team to the Super Bowl championship game and set records doing so. The problem is, in American capitalism, CEOs are compensated directly and explicitly on how they perform against the point spread; that is, against expectations. Imagine the following scenario: a company decides to pay its CEO $10 million in total compensation for the year. It could pay that CEO $10 million in salary or it could pay him $2 million in salary and $8 million worth of phantom stock units (say 100,000 units with the stock at $80 per share). The simple $10 million salary embodies no incentive to increase the stock price, while the $2 million salary plus stock embodies a large incentive to do so. If the CEO can double the price of the stock by the time he retires, he will have earned $18 million in that year rather than $10 million. No wonder, then, that our executives focus almost entirely on the expectations game. They do so at the cost of turning their attention from the real game, from real customers and from real value. In the face of expectations that can run wild, CEOs have increasingly focused on what they can control: managing share price over the short run. Shareholders, on the other hand, should want CEOs to focus on the long term, on increasing share price more or less forever. So it turns out that rather than aligning the interests of shareholders and executives, stock-based compensation has reinforced the agency problem it was created to solve. What’s more, it has destroyed long-term shareholder value by driving shorter horizons of decision making and contributing to shorter CEO tenure. CEOs know that expectations are likely to fall, so they have incentive to leave or retire in order to cash in stock-based compensation instruments while expectations are high. Focusing executives on shareholder value maximization using stock-based compensation was supposed to give shareholders a better deal. Yet, it simply hasn’t worked out that way. Total returns on the S&P 500 for the period from the end of the Great Depression (1933) to the end of 1976, the beginning of the shareholder-value era, were 7.5 percent (compound annual). From 1977 to the end of 2010, they were 6.5 percent–suggesting that shareholders have little to celebrate, despite having been made the clear priority. It is time to do away with stock-based executive compensation. It’s just one lesson we can learn from the NFL and one step towards fixing the game. This post is excerpted from Fixing the Game: Bubbles, Crashes, and What Capitalism Can Learn from the NFL , to be published May 3 by the Harvard Business Press.

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GrapeCity, ActiveReports and Spread receive multiple Best-Seller awards

March 10, 2011

GrapeCity, ActiveReports and Spread receive multiple Best-Seller awards

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Video: Public Worker Protests Spread From Wisconsin to Ohio

February 18, 2011

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — Workers from Wisconsin to Ohio are protesting against legislation that would restrict their collective-bargaining rights. Bloomberg’s Mark Niquette discusses the spread of protests at statehouses with Matt Miller on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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UK economy spread more doubts about recovery

December 18, 2010

UK economy spread more doubts about recovery

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Video: Steinitz Says Wide Israel-U.S. Rate Gap May Hurt Exports: Video

October 5, 2010

Oct. 5 (Bloomberg) — Israeli Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz talks with Bloomberg’s Margaret Brennan about the spread between Israeli and U.S. interest rates, and the outlook for the Middle East peace process. Steinitz speaks with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness.” (This is an excerpt. Source: Bloomberg)

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Magnetic Bolsters Executive Team by Adding Mike Peralta as COO

July 13, 2010

Former North American Sales Lead for Platform A at AOL to Spread Adoption of Search Re-Targeting Among Advertisers

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Natural Gas Price Spreads Trigger New Amaranth Speculation Energy Markets

June 17, 2010

By Alexander Kwiatkowski and Stephen Voss June 17 (Bloomberg) — Trading patterns in natural-gas futures are fanning speculation of a repeat of the collapse four years ago of U.S. hedge fund Amaranth Advisors LLC. The premium for futures expiring in March 2011 over the April 2011 contract surged to 43.3 cents per million British thermal units June 15 on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the highest level since Feb. 19. The spread was 24.8 cents per million Btu as recently as the end of last week, before jumping more than 50 percent on June 14. The rally came even as U.S. inventories rose to their highest level for this time of year since at least 1993, when the government began collecting data. “This is peculiar behavior given that supplies are currently building at a comfortable pace,” Stephen Schork , president of consultant Schork Group Inc. in Villanova, Pennsylvania, wrote in a report yesterday. “We haven’t seen these particular spreads behave in such a manner since a prominent natural-gas trader morphed a $9 billion hedge fund, Amaranth, into a $3 billion fund in August 2006.” Greenwich, Connecticut-based Amaranth collapsed after losing about $6.6 billion on wrong-way trades in natural-gas futures. It had controlled more than half of the U.S. market for the commodity before it failed, according to a Senate report from June 2007. Amaranth agreed last August to pay $7.5 million to settle allegations from U.S. regulators that it tried to manipulate the market for natural-gas futures. Winter-Spring Bridge The March-April 2011 spread, a benchmark relationship because it covers the period from winter to spring, surged as much as 134 percent this month, according to data from Nymex. An increase of the March premium over April may signal speculators are anticipating tighter winter supplies, which would drive prices higher. “The rally of the spread in such a short period of time indicates that something besides fundamental data is driving it higher,” said Carl Neill , an energy analyst at Risk Management Inc. in Chicago. “Some big specs were really on the wrong side.” Trading volume for the spread jumped to more than 8,000 contracts on both June 14 and June 15, compared with an average 2,604 lots last week, Nymex data show. Traders may also be anticipating the U.S. moratorium on offshore drilling in the Gulf of Mexico following the Deepwater Horizon rig explosion will cut gas supplies, Schork said in a telephone interview yesterday. Alternatively, it may be the result of a single speculator taking a larger-than-normal position contrary to the consensus, he said. Wrong-Bet Possibility “As this trade continues to decouple, then Deepwater Horizon is indeed a paradigm shift,” Schork said. If the spread reverts, “then the fundamentals haven’t changed and we had a lot of people making a bet and it was a wrong bet,” he said. In September 2006, when Amaranth had to reverse its trades, the March-April spread tumbled to as low as 42 cents per million Btu from as high as $2.51 in August. At the time, the spread measured the difference between March 2007 and April 2007 prices. Hedge funds are mostly private pools of capital whose managers participate substantially in the profit from speculation on whether the price of assets will rise or fall. Nymex natural gas for July delivery rose 7.5 cents, or 1.5 percent, to trade at $5.053 per million Btu at 10:25 a.m. London time today, after tumbling 21.1 cents yesterday. Front-month gas futures have declined 9.3 percent this year. To contact the reporters on this story: Alexander Kwiatkowski in London at akwiatkowsk2@bloomberg.net ; Stephen Voss in London at sev@bloomberg.net

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Michael Lewis 60 Minutes Interview: Wall Street Bonuses ‘A Very Elegant Form Of Theft’ (VIDEO)

March 13, 2010

Michael Lewis, author of one of the defining books about Wall Street excess, “Liar’s Poker,” told 60 Minutes that bonuses at banks bailed out by the government are akin to “a very elegant form of theft.” [The big banks] have access to a zero percent loan in virtually unlimited quantities from the Federal Reserve. You can take that money and reinvest it in Treasury bonds or government agency securities and you will get the spread and you could do it over and over. You’re essentially borrowing from the government … and taking a cut. Really what’s going on is the people on the top of the firm want to make a lot of money and if they’re going to make a lot of money, they have got to pay the people under them a lot of money, WATCH: Watch CBS News Videos Online

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Stephen Balkam: Sex.com To Be Auctioned: Hey, Bill Gates, How About Bidding on it?

March 10, 2010

One of the most valuable pieces of cyber-real estate is up for sale. According to Wired, sex.com will be auctioned on March 16 and the opening bid is a mere one million dollars. Do we really need another porn site? Can we make do with the estimated 1.3 million sex-related sites already on the web? Never mind the ever popular user-generated sites where folk upload last night’s activity for free without so much as a fee or password required. No, I think it would be an amazing piece of largess – not to mention an inspired acquisition – if Bill Gates and his Foundation, were to outbid everyone and snap up this heavily trafficked site. Then the smart folks at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation could convert sex.com into the world’s leading safe sex portal in an effort to stop the spread of HIV and the myriad of other sexually transmitted diseases, while also curbing the rise of unwanted teenage pregnancy. Whatever you think of online porn — whether you have a laissez-faire attitude or are an outright opponent of the stuff — the world wide web would not miss the disappearance of sex.com as a sexual shop front. What would be inspired would be the appearance of educated and fact-based messages, videos, tips and guides on how to have a wonderful and loving sex life being responsible and safe for you and your partner. Who better to deliver such a site than the man who presided first over the spread of the personal computer to every corner of the globe and who is doing his level best to give away his personal fortune, particularly to those corners where HIV/AIDS and other STD’s are so rampant. So come on, Bill, be a sport. $1M or thereabouts certainly won’t break the bank. Put a smile on our faces and a good feeling in our hearts. And, in the future, when kids land on sex.com they’ll get some real sexual education and tips that will keep them, their partners and, eventually, their own children safe. You know it’s the right thing to do.

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Obama to Ask UN for Global Cooperation to Tackle Terror, Poverty, Climate

September 23, 2009

By Nicholas Johnston Sept. 23 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama , in his first address to the United Nations General Assembly, will urge global cooperation on issues from terrorism to climate change. In his remarks later today at UN headquarters in New York, Obama will call on all nations to take action again terrorism, genocide, climate change, poverty and the spread of nuclear weapons, according to excerpts released by the White House. “This cannot be solely America’s endeavor,” Obama is to tell world leaders gathered for the international body’s annual meeting. “Now is the time for all of us to take our share of responsibility for a global response to global challenges.” Obama has already pressed for international efforts to fight climate change, telling a UN conference yesterday that both rich nations and emerging economies must “do what we can when we can” to promote economic growth without damaging the planet. Today, he will expand his call for nations to work with the U.S. on other crises facing the world. “Those who used to chastise America for acting alone in the world cannot now stand by and wait for America to solve the world’s problems alone,” Obama will say. “We have sought, in word and deed, a new era of engagement with the world.” He also echoed the theme of global cooperation last night when he told an audience of government leaders, executives and celebrities at the Clinton Global Initiative that the U.S. is striving to build a “new spirit of global partnership.” The forum, founded by former President Bill Clinton , secured $8 billion in commitments last year to fight global poverty and disease. Lofty Goals “You can’t just preach lofty goals and wait for somebody to act,” Obama said last night. ’’You have to step up. You have to serve.’’ Obama’s speech to the General Assembly today comes in the midst of a series of meetings with world leaders, including Chinese President Hu Jintao yesterday, and Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev today. In today’s remarks, Obama will warn of the consequences of failing to take action, including the spread of nuclear weapons and terrorism, “melting ice caps and ravaged populations,” and “persistent poverty and pandemic disease.” “I say this not to sow fear, but to state a fact: the magnitude of our challenges has yet to be met by the measure of our action,” he is to say. After this morning’s speech, Obama will participate in a wreath laying at the UN for staff members killed in the line of duty and then attend a lunch hosted by Secretary General Ban Ki- moon. This evening, the president and First Lady Michelle Obama will host a reception for world leaders at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. To contact the reporter on this story: Nicholas Johnston in New York at njohnston3@bloomberg.net .

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Swine Flu Profits: Drug Companies To Reap Billions

July 20, 2009

Some of the world’s leading pharmaceutical companies are reaping billions of dollars in extra revenue amid global concern about the spread of swine flu. Analysts expect to see a boost in sales from GlaxoSmithKline, Roche and Sanofi-Aventis when the companies report first-half earnings lifted by government contracts for flu vaccines and antiviral medicines.

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